The missionary joy of proclaiming the Gospel

by Piero Gheddo

Exemplified by the different stories of people who have dedicated their lives to evangelization. Blessed Clemente Vismara, a life full of difficulties and problems, who created great Gospel works without ever losing enthusiasm for his vocation.

Rome (AsiaNews) -
On 17 May 2013 Pope Francis, receiving the heads of the Pontifical Mission
Societies, spoke of the duty to " keep evangelization, the paradigm of
every act of the Church, alive... The Bishop of Rome is called to be a pastor
not only of his particular Church, but also all the churches. In this task, the
Pontifical Mission Societies are a privileged instrument in the hands of the
Pope. " He added: "There are so many people who have not yet known or
encountered Christ." To proclaim Christ to these people is a task for all
of us who have "received the gift of faith, not to hide it but
to spread it so that it might enlighten the path of many brothers and
sisters."

At the end of his speech, Pope Francis said, quoting Pope Paul VI, he hoped that
the Good News is not proclaimed "from evangelisers who are dejected,
discouraged, impatient or anxious, but from ministers of the Gospel whose lives
glow with fervour, who have first received the joy of Christ, and who are
willing to risk their lives so that the kingdom may be proclaimed and the
Church established in the midst of the world".

In
"Redemptoris Missio" (1990), John Paul II, addressing the young
Churches, wrote: "you
must be like the first Christians and radiate enthusiasm and courage, in
generous devotion to God and neighbor."
The missionary experiences the joy of proclaiming the Gospel from being
intimately united to Jesus, who, being united to the Father and the Spirit,
sends us his joy. In fact, as Saint John says, "Deus Caritas Est,"
God is Love. When the missionary gives himself totally to Christ, he
experiences the promise that the Son of God made to the Apostles: "These
things I have said that my joy may be in you and that your joy may be
full" (John 15: 11). It is a precarious, temporary joy, is a state of mind
which supports the messenger of the Gospel in his effort, in suffering,
sacrifice, failures, persecution. The joy of being intimately united with
Christ makes the proclamation of the Gospel effective, because the missionary
transmits this joy, this enthusiasm and peace of heart.

This may all sound
rather theoretical or like a utopian dream. But it is not so, indeed, it is
confirmed by the life of many missionaries who are fondly remembered long after
they have gone him. I base this on my own experience. I have written fifteen specifically
requested biographies of missionaries (including those not from PIME). I have
thoroughly investigated their characters, through their letters and
testimonials and I realized that one of the characteristics common to all was the
very joy of being messengers of the Gospel. They differed from each other in
every other aspect of their mission: from Msgr. Aristide Pirovano, who founded
the diocese of Macapà in the Amazon, 12 years Superior General of PIME, who
then he spent his last years in the leprosarium of Marituba, where he took over
from Marcello Candia and set up many religious, healthcare and educational
projects for the poor, to Father Leopoldo
Pastori, that shortly after his ordination to the priesthood in 1969 was hit by
a liver cancer. At a little more than thirty years old, he could have become a
burden to himself and to others. Instead, he was able to go to Guinea Bissau,
where his main job was prayer and spiritual direction. Yet both of them
preserved until the very end of their life, the joy and excitement of being
missionaries and after death enjoyed a widespread "odor of sanctity."
This can only be explained by their intimate union with Christ?

The last biography
I wrote is that of the Blessed Father Clemente Vismara ("Fatto per
andare lontano," Emi). After
four years in the trenches in the First World War and 65 years as a missionary
in Burma (pictured), in inhuman situations of extreme poverty and isolation,
among tribal people who still lived almost in prehistoric times, he died at age
91 ( 1897-1988) and his brother said, "He died without ever having
aged." In fact, when I met him in Burma in 1983 (aged 86), he still had
the smile of a child, the liveliness and the desire to joke of a young man and he
did not want to talk about his past, but said, "Let's talk about my
future. " He realized, in those situations, great works of the Gospel, but
never allowed himself to be hardened by the tremendous hardships and
difficulties.

A fellow
missionary, Father Angelo Campagnoli, testified at the diocesan process for his
beatification, "Clemente was a man of practical faith, he had a
supernatural vision of life, a profound abandonment to God. Everything about
him was guided by faith, which was the basis of his strength and certainties. He
was confident that, despite everything, everything would turn out well in the
end. Hi faith gave him the strength to
persevere, even to start over again on many occasions, even after repeated
disappointments. This was real perseverance ... He was enthusiastic about his
vocation, and because he believed with
such a great passion, he could communicate it .... And I think that joy is
another feature, a singular virtue of Father Vismara. Of course it was probably
a natural gift, and his spiritual life rested on this, but there was no
distinction between the two spheres in him".

Father Rizieri
Badiali, who was also his companion in mission said: "Father Vismara bore
all his trials with joy, because he said that if we were persecuted it meant
that everything was fine. This was his faith, an enthusiastic, joyful faith,
full of the desire to save souls, Christian life for him was based on facts, on
being one with the will of the Lord ... This was the faith of Father Clement, and
it supported him throughout his life until his death, with a great joy, a great
will to live which he felt for himself and for the children he welcomed
whenever he could. "

A catechist of Father Clement, Anselmo U, said: "We endured many hardships
together: we went to visit the remote villages and often had to sleep under the
trees and under the stars, because it took a long time to get there. Yet Father
Vismara was always serene and smiling. I've never seen him angry. Sometimes I
got sick and was very weak: then told me to pray and to make the people of the
village where we were pray".

Father Clemente Hla
Shwe, one of his orphans today a priest: "He was certainly a man of
prayer, a man of great faith, I would say a smiling faith, because he always
smiled. He communicated so much joy and enthusiasm to anyone he met. Me too,
when we met, he was always urging me to be a priest zealous in my apostolic
work, but also full of joy and smiles. "

Sister Battistina Sironi of the Sisters of the child Mary, who spent thirty
years with Father Clemente in Mongping from 1958 until his death in 1988, in a
lengthy interview that I did 17 February 1993 in Kengtung said: "He was
always cheerful. When he had problems, he would sing in his home. Then we nuns would
call the children and take them to church to pray for Father Clement, who had serious
worries".

Sister Battistina
was undoubtedly the person who lived closest to Father Clement for the longest
stretch of time. At the diocesan process in Kengtung she testified: "I
have never met a man of such great faith as Father Clement. He was truly a man
of prayer, full of piety and charity towards all, especially the poor and even
more for the little ones. When there was nothing to eat, he said to me: 'You
stay here with the kids while I go to church.' He would go to the church to
pray and certainly shortly after the rice we needed came. Keep in mind that
even then there were one hundred orphans who had to be fed every day! He prayed
much. especially in the evening saying the Rosary: ​​he
never missed a single day. He never missed daily Mass and celebrated it with such
great devotion and meditation. "

In the Year of
Faith, the example of Blessed Clemente Vismara is challenging first of all for
us priests and missionaries, but also for all consecrated persons and all
believers in Christ. Faith was the engine of life for him, he was always calm
and smiling in spite of all the suffering, difficulties, disease: his was not a
perfunctory faith, one that did not disturb his tranquility and daily live, but
a living, militant faith, that made him willing to sacrifice and suffer for good
and to avoid evil and to always be at the service of his people and of the
Church. If there is no enthusiasm and joy in the things we do and we believe
in, then there is no joy and serenity of spirit and we risk growing old before our
time.